Post by Rob Caprio on Oct 29, 2018 20:51:22 GMT -5
All portions are ©️ Robert Caprio 2006-2024
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Let’s continue with more questions that ONLY have a conspiratorial answer to them (31 so far). Here are four more to bring our total to thirty five.
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1) Since the Warren Commission (WC) said that both the FBI and the Dallas County Sheriff’s office received warnings about LHO being killed, why weren’t they better prepared to protect Lee Harvey Oswald (LHO)?
On page 209 of the WC Report you will read this:
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historymatters.com/archive/jfk/wc/wr/pages/WCReport_0117a.gif
During the night, between 2:30 and 3 a.m., the local office of the FBI and the Sheriff’s office received telephone calls from an unidentified man who warned that a committee had decided “to kill the man who had killed the President.” Shortly after, an FBI agent notified the Dallas police of the anonymous threat. The Police department and ultimately Chief Curry were informed of both threats. (WCR, p. 209)
historymatters.com/archive/jfk/wc/wr/html/WCReport_0117a.htm
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Reading this it makes you wonder how LHO was so UNPROTECTED since they had advanced warning of the attack that would be coming. Also, what “committee” decided LHO needed to die? I would love to know that as I’m sure many of you would too.
2) Who was Officer 279?
He was allegedly the man that found the jacket near the J.D. Tippit (JDT) murder scene. We know many attribute Capt. Westbrook with finding it, but he said he did NOT!
Mr. BALL. Did you ever find some clothing?
Mr. WESTBROOK. That was before, Mr. Ball.
Mr. BALL. When was that?
Mr. WESTBROOK. Actually, I didn't find it--it was pointed out to me by either some officer that--that was while we were going over the scene in the close area where the shooting was concerned, someone pointed out a jacket to me that was laying under a car and I got the jacket and told the officer to take the license number.
So since he didn’t find it, the need to find someone who did find it arose. The Dallas Police Department (DPD) dispatch logs were just the fix. If we go to Commission Exhibit (CE) 1974, page 862 we will see this:
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historymatters.com/archive/jfk/wc/wcvols/wh23/pages/WH_Vol23_0447b.gif
279 (unknown) We believe we’ve got that suspect on shooting this officer out here. Got his white jacket. Believe he dumped it on this parking lot behind this service station at 400 block East Jefferson across from Dudley-Hughes and he had a white jacket on. We believe this is it.
Dispatcher 10-4, you do have the suspect, is that correct.
279 (unknown) No, just the jacket laying on the ground.
historymatters.com/archive/jfk/wc/wcvols/wh23/html/WH_Vol23_0447b.htm
Quote off
This is helpful in several ways. First off, the confirmation of a white jacket is very good as this is the color broadcasted from the JDT murder scene by cops who got this color from a witness or witnesses. Secondly, the old WC defender claim of it being found in the backseat of a car is out the window as Officer 279, whomever this was, said it was just “laying on the ground.”
3) Why did Captain Will Fritz REFUSE to transfer LHO before Sunday morning?
In his WC testimony we see DA Henry Wade asked him to transfer LHO on Friday night.
Mr. BALL. Do you recall that on Friday, November 22, Wade asked you or did he or didn't District Attorney Wade ask you to transfer Oswald to the county jail for security?
Mr. FRITZ. That would be on the night of the 22d?
Mr. BALL. On the night of the 22d.
Mr. FRITZ. Yes, sir; he asked me if I would transfer him that night.
Mr. BALL. What did you tell him?
Mr. FRITZ. I told him we didn't want to transfer him yet. We wanted to talk to him some more. We talked a little bit. He didn't actually want him transferred. He just was more or less talking about whether or not we wanted to transfer him.
So they couldn’t talk to him once they transferred him? Why not? Also, Chief Curry asked him to transfer LHO on Saturday, November 23, 1963, at 4:00 p.m. and again he did NOT do it.
Mr. BALL. Had you been requested by Sheriff Decker to transfer him there before?
Mr. FRITZ. No, sir. I had talked to the chief about transferring him down there. The chief had called me on the 23d, on the 23d, I can't give you the exact minute, probably a little after noon, he had called me and asked me when we would be ready to transfer him and I told him we were still questioning him. We didn't want to transfer him yet. He said, "Can he be ready by about 4 o'clock? Can he be transferred by 4 o'clock?" I told him I didn't think we could.
Mr. BALL. That would be Saturday afternoon?
Mr. FRITZ. That would be the 23d, would be Saturday, yes, sir. Then he asked me could he be ready by 10 o'clock in the morning, so I could tell these people something definitely, and I felt sure we would be ready by then. However, we didn't, we ran overtime as you can see by this report, an hour and a half over, when they come over to transfer him.
Mr. BALL. Why did you say you would not be ready by 4 o'clock on Saturday?
Mr. FRITZ. We wanted to ask him some more questions, to get more information.
Mr. BALL. Did you consider transferring him at night?
Mr. FRITZ. At night?
Mr. BALL. Yes.
Mr. FRITZ. During the night on Saturday night, I had a call at my home from uniformed captain, Captain Frazier, I believe is his name, he called me out at home and told me they had had some threats and he had to transfer Oswald.
And I said, well, I don't know. I said there has been no security setup, and the chief having something to do with this transfer and you had better call him, because---so he told me he would.
Despite known death threats Fritz still wouldn’t move him until Sunday morning. Why? His excuse of wanting to get more information out of him is lame given his claim that he made NO notes or recordings of the interrogations. Why did they wait UNTIL an announced transfer on Sunday morning? (Leavelle would say they did NOT announce Ruby’s transfer time, little good that did LHO, huh?) You can decide this for yourself, but NO non-conspiratorial answer holds any weight.
4) Who was the man who looked like LHO shooting near the Trinity River in late August-early September 1963?
In CE 2446, page 587 we find the following;
Quote on
historymatters.com/archive/jfk/wc/wcvols/wh25/pages/WC_Vol25_0309a.gif
Opal Robertson stated she was with her husband during the latter part of August or early part of September, 1963 when they observed a white man in his 20’s fire a rifle in the Trinity River Bottom located behind 104 Woodland Dr., Irving, Texas. Mrs. Robertson said they observed this man around 5:00 or 5:30 one afternoon. Mrs. Robertson said after she had seen pictures of Lee Harvey Oswald in newspapers and on television, she believed the man they saw firing a rifle into the river bottom looked like Oswald. Mrs. Robertson said the man was accompanied by a woman in her 20’s, 5’ 6”, 130 lbs. with dark hair and a small boy about four years old. A dark colored car of an old model was parked nearby. (CE 2446, p. 587)
historymatters.com/archive/jfk/wc/wcvols/wh25/html/WC_Vol25_0309a.htm
Quote off
Obviously if this is LHO then the WC would have an incident of him practicing, but my guess is it is NOT. Besides, they would have to identify the woman and the boy too. Mrs. Robertson said the man came back four or five days later and they carried on a conversation with him for about five to ten minutes. The man said he was from “Irving, Texas.”
We see another pattern of someone making noise and this time more subtely leaving a trail to where LHO’s family was staying. There would be many more.
We again see evidence that disputes the claims of the WC, thus, their conclusion is sunk again.
lee-harvey-oswald.journal-of-life.com/files/images/1295391600/56e45a43071.jpg
Let’s continue with more questions that ONLY have a conspiratorial answer to them (31 so far). Here are four more to bring our total to thirty five.
**********************************
1) Since the Warren Commission (WC) said that both the FBI and the Dallas County Sheriff’s office received warnings about LHO being killed, why weren’t they better prepared to protect Lee Harvey Oswald (LHO)?
On page 209 of the WC Report you will read this:
Quote on
historymatters.com/archive/jfk/wc/wr/pages/WCReport_0117a.gif
During the night, between 2:30 and 3 a.m., the local office of the FBI and the Sheriff’s office received telephone calls from an unidentified man who warned that a committee had decided “to kill the man who had killed the President.” Shortly after, an FBI agent notified the Dallas police of the anonymous threat. The Police department and ultimately Chief Curry were informed of both threats. (WCR, p. 209)
historymatters.com/archive/jfk/wc/wr/html/WCReport_0117a.htm
Quote off
Reading this it makes you wonder how LHO was so UNPROTECTED since they had advanced warning of the attack that would be coming. Also, what “committee” decided LHO needed to die? I would love to know that as I’m sure many of you would too.
2) Who was Officer 279?
He was allegedly the man that found the jacket near the J.D. Tippit (JDT) murder scene. We know many attribute Capt. Westbrook with finding it, but he said he did NOT!
Mr. BALL. Did you ever find some clothing?
Mr. WESTBROOK. That was before, Mr. Ball.
Mr. BALL. When was that?
Mr. WESTBROOK. Actually, I didn't find it--it was pointed out to me by either some officer that--that was while we were going over the scene in the close area where the shooting was concerned, someone pointed out a jacket to me that was laying under a car and I got the jacket and told the officer to take the license number.
So since he didn’t find it, the need to find someone who did find it arose. The Dallas Police Department (DPD) dispatch logs were just the fix. If we go to Commission Exhibit (CE) 1974, page 862 we will see this:
Quote on
historymatters.com/archive/jfk/wc/wcvols/wh23/pages/WH_Vol23_0447b.gif
279 (unknown) We believe we’ve got that suspect on shooting this officer out here. Got his white jacket. Believe he dumped it on this parking lot behind this service station at 400 block East Jefferson across from Dudley-Hughes and he had a white jacket on. We believe this is it.
Dispatcher 10-4, you do have the suspect, is that correct.
279 (unknown) No, just the jacket laying on the ground.
historymatters.com/archive/jfk/wc/wcvols/wh23/html/WH_Vol23_0447b.htm
Quote off
This is helpful in several ways. First off, the confirmation of a white jacket is very good as this is the color broadcasted from the JDT murder scene by cops who got this color from a witness or witnesses. Secondly, the old WC defender claim of it being found in the backseat of a car is out the window as Officer 279, whomever this was, said it was just “laying on the ground.”
3) Why did Captain Will Fritz REFUSE to transfer LHO before Sunday morning?
In his WC testimony we see DA Henry Wade asked him to transfer LHO on Friday night.
Mr. BALL. Do you recall that on Friday, November 22, Wade asked you or did he or didn't District Attorney Wade ask you to transfer Oswald to the county jail for security?
Mr. FRITZ. That would be on the night of the 22d?
Mr. BALL. On the night of the 22d.
Mr. FRITZ. Yes, sir; he asked me if I would transfer him that night.
Mr. BALL. What did you tell him?
Mr. FRITZ. I told him we didn't want to transfer him yet. We wanted to talk to him some more. We talked a little bit. He didn't actually want him transferred. He just was more or less talking about whether or not we wanted to transfer him.
So they couldn’t talk to him once they transferred him? Why not? Also, Chief Curry asked him to transfer LHO on Saturday, November 23, 1963, at 4:00 p.m. and again he did NOT do it.
Mr. BALL. Had you been requested by Sheriff Decker to transfer him there before?
Mr. FRITZ. No, sir. I had talked to the chief about transferring him down there. The chief had called me on the 23d, on the 23d, I can't give you the exact minute, probably a little after noon, he had called me and asked me when we would be ready to transfer him and I told him we were still questioning him. We didn't want to transfer him yet. He said, "Can he be ready by about 4 o'clock? Can he be transferred by 4 o'clock?" I told him I didn't think we could.
Mr. BALL. That would be Saturday afternoon?
Mr. FRITZ. That would be the 23d, would be Saturday, yes, sir. Then he asked me could he be ready by 10 o'clock in the morning, so I could tell these people something definitely, and I felt sure we would be ready by then. However, we didn't, we ran overtime as you can see by this report, an hour and a half over, when they come over to transfer him.
Mr. BALL. Why did you say you would not be ready by 4 o'clock on Saturday?
Mr. FRITZ. We wanted to ask him some more questions, to get more information.
Mr. BALL. Did you consider transferring him at night?
Mr. FRITZ. At night?
Mr. BALL. Yes.
Mr. FRITZ. During the night on Saturday night, I had a call at my home from uniformed captain, Captain Frazier, I believe is his name, he called me out at home and told me they had had some threats and he had to transfer Oswald.
And I said, well, I don't know. I said there has been no security setup, and the chief having something to do with this transfer and you had better call him, because---so he told me he would.
Despite known death threats Fritz still wouldn’t move him until Sunday morning. Why? His excuse of wanting to get more information out of him is lame given his claim that he made NO notes or recordings of the interrogations. Why did they wait UNTIL an announced transfer on Sunday morning? (Leavelle would say they did NOT announce Ruby’s transfer time, little good that did LHO, huh?) You can decide this for yourself, but NO non-conspiratorial answer holds any weight.
4) Who was the man who looked like LHO shooting near the Trinity River in late August-early September 1963?
In CE 2446, page 587 we find the following;
Quote on
historymatters.com/archive/jfk/wc/wcvols/wh25/pages/WC_Vol25_0309a.gif
Opal Robertson stated she was with her husband during the latter part of August or early part of September, 1963 when they observed a white man in his 20’s fire a rifle in the Trinity River Bottom located behind 104 Woodland Dr., Irving, Texas. Mrs. Robertson said they observed this man around 5:00 or 5:30 one afternoon. Mrs. Robertson said after she had seen pictures of Lee Harvey Oswald in newspapers and on television, she believed the man they saw firing a rifle into the river bottom looked like Oswald. Mrs. Robertson said the man was accompanied by a woman in her 20’s, 5’ 6”, 130 lbs. with dark hair and a small boy about four years old. A dark colored car of an old model was parked nearby. (CE 2446, p. 587)
historymatters.com/archive/jfk/wc/wcvols/wh25/html/WC_Vol25_0309a.htm
Quote off
Obviously if this is LHO then the WC would have an incident of him practicing, but my guess is it is NOT. Besides, they would have to identify the woman and the boy too. Mrs. Robertson said the man came back four or five days later and they carried on a conversation with him for about five to ten minutes. The man said he was from “Irving, Texas.”
We see another pattern of someone making noise and this time more subtely leaving a trail to where LHO’s family was staying. There would be many more.
We again see evidence that disputes the claims of the WC, thus, their conclusion is sunk again.